Difference between revisions of "Street harassment"

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'''Street harassment''' is the widespread claim among feminists that women are routinely harassed in public by men.<ref>http://www.scholarsstrategynetwork.org/sites/default/files/ssn_key_findings_chesney-lind_on_public_transport_and_violence_against_women.pdf</ref> The founder of the site ''stopstreetharassment.org'' undertook two anonymous online surveys and found results that claim street harassment is very common, with 38% of women participating in these surveys claiming to have been harassed by way of ''honking and whistling'' within the last month.<ref>http://www.stopstreetharassment.org/resources/statistics/sshstudies/</ref>
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'''Street harassment''', also known as '''everyday sexism''' is the widespread claim among feminists that women are routinely harassed in public by men.<ref>https://twitter.com/EverydaySexism</ref> The founder of the site ''stopstreetharassment.org'' undertook two anonymous online surveys and found results that claim street harassment is very common, with 38% of women participating in these surveys claiming to have been harassed by way of ''honking and whistling'' within the last month.<ref>http://www.stopstreetharassment.org/resources/statistics/sshstudies/</ref>
   
 
Surveys like this are deeply flawed:
 
Surveys like this are deeply flawed:

Revision as of 02:23, 25 April 2014

Street harassment, also known as everyday sexism is the widespread claim among feminists that women are routinely harassed in public by men.[1] The founder of the site stopstreetharassment.org undertook two anonymous online surveys and found results that claim street harassment is very common, with 38% of women participating in these surveys claiming to have been harassed by way of honking and whistling within the last month.[2]

Surveys like this are deeply flawed:

  • They rely on subjective self-reporting
  • They involve a selection bias in that people who see relevance in online survey are far more likely to take part in the survey
  • They can involve leading questions intended to elicit a particular answer
  • Having been undertaken by someone who has a known bias the research is immediately suspect

While claims of this behavour are common, proof is lacking. The site stopstreetharassment lists only surveys, questionnaires and polls as evidence.[3]

References

<references>